Silverberg, Robert. Roma EternaDivergence: c 1270 BCEWhat if: The first Exodus failed on the shores of the Red Sea, preventing the
rise of Christianity. Fifteen centuries later the two branches of the Roman
Empire assisted each other against invasions from barbarians and Persians,
and the empire(s) continued to dominate Europe and the Mediterranean for
another two millennia.Series note: Collection of previously published stories all set in the same
timeline. In internal chronological order, the stories are "A.U.C. 1203.
Prologue", "With Caesar in the Underworld", "A Hero of the Empire", "The
Second Wave", "Waiting for the End", "An Outpost of the Empire", "Getting
to Know the Dragon", "The Reign of Terror", "Via Roma", "Tales from the
Venia Woods", and "To the Promised Land".Published: HarperCollins/Eos 2003 (0380978598BUY), 2004 (0380814889BUY);
Gollancz 2003 (0575073535, 0575073543).Original in: English.Translation: French by Jean-Marc Chambon as Roma Æterna, Laffont 2004
(2221098544).Awards: Finalist: 2003 Sidewise Award for best short-form alternate history.

Silverberg, Robert. "A.U.C. 1203. Prologue"Divergence: c 1270 BCESummary: Short introduction to the divergence point of the Roma Eterna
cycle, as one historian postulates to another a what-if of an obscure tribe
of Aegyptian slaves.Series note: A Roma Eterna story.Published: In Roma Eterna, q.v.

Silverberg, Robert. "With Caesar in the Underworld"Divergence: c 1270 BCESummary: In c. 1282 AUC (529 CE), an ambassador from the eastern empire
expresses a desire to see the seamy underside of Rome.Series note: A Roma Eterna story.Published: In Asimov's Science Fiction, October/November 2002;
Roma Eterna, q.v.; and Phases of the Moon: Stories
from Six Decades, Subterranean 2004 (1931081999BUY), v.t. Phases of
the Moon: Six Decades of Masterpieces by the SFWA Grand Master, ibooks
2004 (0743498011BUY).Awards: Finalist: 2002 Sidewise Award for best short-form alternate history.

Silverberg, Robert. "A Hero of the Empire"Divergence: c 1270 BCESummary: In c. 1370 AUC (617 CE), a western Roman diplomat exiled to Arabia
Deserta encounters a charismatic merchant who intends to overturn the
belief in hundreds of Arabic gods in favor of just "the god", and realizes
that this man could eventually pose a threat to Rome itself.Series note: A Roma Eterna story.Published: In The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction October/November
1999; Roma Eterna, q.v.; and One Lamp:
The Best Alternate History Stories from F&SF (ed. Gordon Van
Gelder), q.v.Awards: Finalist: 1999 Sidewise Award for best short-form alternate history.

Silverberg, Robert. "The Second Wave"Divergence: c 1270 BCESummary: In 1861 AUC (1108 CE), the western Roman Empire sends seven legions
across the great western ocean to attempt the conquest of "Yucatan", a land
discovered by Norsemen. A prior invasion force failed miserably; will this
second do better?Series note: A Roma Eterna story.Published: In Asimov's Science Fiction, August 2002; and Roma
Eterna, q.v.

Silverberg, Robert. "Waiting for the End"Divergence: c 1270 BCESummary: In 1951 AUC (1198 CE), centuries after the western Roman Empire has
fought off the barbarians of the north, it faces its most dangerous
invader, the eastern Roman Empire of Constantinople. With the west drained
by military losses in the New World and confronted on three sides, Caesar
Maximilanus VI opts for peaceful surrender.Series note: A Roma Eterna story.Published: In Asimov's Science Fiction, October/November 1998; and
Roma Eterna, q.v.Awards: Finalist: 1998 Sidewise Award for best short-form alternate history.

Silverberg, Robert. "An Outpost of the Empire"Divergence: c 1270 BCESummary: In 2206 AUC (1453 CE), 250 years after the subjugation of Rome to
Constantinople, the tables have been turned. Now, a Roman proconsul is
appointed to rule Venice, where he encounters a very Byzantine lady.Series note: A Roma Eterna story.Published: In Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, November 1991;
Roads Not Taken: Tales of Alternate History (eds.
Gardner Dozois and Stanley Schmidt), q.v.; and Roma
Eterna, q.v.

Silverberg, Robert. "Getting to Know the Dragon"Divergence: c 1270 BCESummary: In 2503 AUC (1750 CE), during one of Rome's more decadent eras, an
historian has the chance to study Trajan VII Draco's lost memoir of the
circumnavigation of the globe 200 years earlier.Series note: A Roma Eterna story.Comments: Version published in Far Horizons includes a short introduction
which outlines the course of the Roma Eterna alternate history and
where each story (published by 1999) fits in.Published: In Far Horizons: The Great Worlds of Science Fiction (ed. Robert
Silverberg), Avon 1999 (0380976307BUY), 2000 (0380796945BUY), Little
Brown/Orbit 1999 (1857239423); and Roma Eterna, q.v.Original in: English.Translation: Nederlands by Jan Smit as "Het Logboek van de Draak", in Verre
Horizons (ed. Silverberg), Luitingh-Sijthoff 2000 (9024534968).Translation: French by Jean-Pierre Roblain as "A la rencontre du Dragon", in
Horizons Lointains (ed. Siverberg), J'ai lu 2000 (2290304859).Awards: Finalist: 1999 Sidewise Award for best short-form alternate history.

Silverberg, Robert. "Via Roma"Divergence: c 1270 BCESummary: In 2603 AUC (1850 CE), a well-to-do young Britannic visitor to Rome
lands among the political "jet set" and ends up witnessing from the
sidelines the bloody creation of the Second Roman Republic.Series note: A Roma Eterna story.Published: In Asimov's Science Fiction, April 1994; and Roma
Eterna, q.v.

Silverberg, Robert. "Tales from the Venia Woods"Divergence: c 1270 BCESummary: In 2653 AUC (1900 CE), early during the Second Roman Republic, two
children meet a mysterious old man hiding in a ruined imperial hunting
lodge in the Teutonic provinces.Series note: A Roma Eterna story.Published: In The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1989; The
Year's Best Science Fiction, Seventh Annual Collection (ed. Gardner
Dozois), St. Martin's 1990 (0312044518, 0312044526), v.t. Best New SF
4, Robinson 1990 (1854870572); Roma Eterna, q.v.; and
The Mammoth Book of Alternate Histories (eds. Ian
Watson and Ian Whates), q.v.Original in: English.Translation: French by Hélègne Collon as "Légendes de la
forêt Veniane", in Le nez de
Cléopâtre, q.v.Translation: Italian by Barbara Fabbri as "Racconti dalle foreste di Venia", in
Stelle di neutroni (ed. Gardner Dozois), Mondadori 1992 (8804360429).